Restaurant in Philadelphia, United States
Parc
405Pearl PointsAll-day French bistro, reliable value on Rittenhouse.

About Parc
Parc is Stephen Starr's all-day French brasserie on Rittenhouse Square — the most practical answer to a proper bistro meal in Philadelphia. At a $$ price point with a 230-selection France-focused wine list and easy booking, it delivers steak frites, escargots, and fruits de mer with consistency. A 4.6 rating across nearly 6,000 reviews backs that up.
The Verdict
A 4.6 Google rating across nearly 6,000 reviews is the clearest signal you can get that Parc delivers consistently — and at a $$ price point (roughly $40–$65 for two courses), it does so without asking you to commit to a high-stakes dinner. Stephen Starr's Rittenhouse Square brasserie is the most practical answer to the question: where do I get a proper French bistro meal in Philadelphia? Book it for lunch, for a long weekend brunch, or for a weeknight dinner when you want steak frites and a glass of Burgundy without the theatre of a formal restaurant. Booking is easy, hours are long, and the wine list has genuine depth at reasonable prices.
Portrait
Parc sits at 227 S 18th St, right on Rittenhouse Square — one of the few genuinely walkable dining neighbourhoods in Philadelphia , and its all-day format (open from 8am Monday through Friday, 9:30am on weekends) makes it one of the more flexible French restaurants in the city. Chef Matt Hagar runs a kitchen focused on brasserie fundamentals: steak frites, escargots, fruits de mer. These are not reinvented or deconstructed , they are executed as the format demands, which is exactly what you want from a room like this.
Wine Director Robert Kidd oversees a list of 230 selections with a total inventory of 2,520 bottles, with a clear emphasis on France. For a $$ restaurant, that's a serious program. The list is priced accessibly , there are bottles under $50, a broad mid-range, and $100+ options for those who want to spend up. Corkage is $25 if you bring your own. The France-forward selection isn't incidental: it matches the kitchen's bistro register precisely, and if you're the kind of diner who wants to pair a proper Chablis with oysters or a village Burgundy with duck, Parc's list makes that achievable without importing a sommelier's help. That alignment between the food's classical French structure and the wine program's depth is what puts Parc ahead of most casual French options in this city. For a comparable wine experience anchored in French cuisine at the upper end globally, consider Hotel de Ville Crissier or L'Effervescence in Tokyo , but Parc is doing something more grounded and more accessible than either of those rooms.
The Opinionated About Dining ranking (#759 in Casual North America for 2024) confirms what the Google score suggests: this is a venue with a real following, not just a tourist draw. Starr's restaurant group is adept at high-volume rooms that don't feel like high-volume rooms, and Parc is one of the better examples of that. General Manager Lauren Shandelman keeps operations steady across a genuinely demanding all-day schedule.
If you're comparing Parc against Philadelphia's French-adjacent options, My Loup offers French-inspired cooking in a tighter, more intimate format , worth considering if you want something quieter and more chef-driven. Jean-Georges Philadelphia operates at a higher price tier and a more formal register. Parc sits between those two: more casual than Jean-Georges, more cinematic in scale than My Loup. For broader Philadelphia dining context, see our full Philadelphia restaurants guide. You can also explore Philadelphia hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.
For reference points in other cities at higher price tiers: Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, and Alinea in Chicago represent what French and fine-dining ambition looks like when the price ceiling is removed. Parc doesn't compete in that tier , it isn't trying to. What it offers is a well-run, well-stocked French brasserie at an approachable price, open seven days a week, easy to book, and consistent enough to warrant its near-6,000-review rating.
Practical Details
Parc is open Monday through Thursday 8am–10pm, Friday 8am–11pm, Saturday 9:30am–11pm, and Sunday 9:30am–10pm. The $$ pricing means a two-course meal without drinks runs $40–65 per person. The wine list starts under $50 per bottle with a strong French selection across the range; corkage is $25 if you bring your own. Booking is easy , walk-ins are more viable here than at most Philadelphia restaurants of this profile, but reservations are direct if you want certainty. Located at 227 S 18th St on Rittenhouse Square, it's accessible on foot from most central Philadelphia hotels. For further context on dining in the city, see our Philadelphia restaurants guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Parc good for solo dining?
Yes — Parc's all-day format and brasserie-style counter seating make it one of the more comfortable solo options in Rittenhouse. At $$ pricing (roughly $40–$65 for two courses), eating alone here won't feel like a financial stretch. The Monday-to-Friday 8am opening also makes it a solid solo lunch stop.
Can Parc accommodate groups?
Groups of four to six should be fine at Parc given the scale of a Stephen Starr operation, but call ahead — phone reservations are advisable for larger parties given how consistently busy the room runs. The $$ price point keeps group tabs manageable. Large groups wanting a private dining setup should confirm directly with the restaurant before booking.
What should I order at Parc?
Stick to the brasserie classics: steak frites, escargots, and fruits de mer are the dishes Parc explicitly anchors its identity to. With 230 wine selections and a predominantly French list at $$ pricing, ordering wine by the bottle is worth considering — corkage is $25 if you bring your own.
Is lunch or dinner better at Parc?
Lunch is the stronger value case — the $$ price point means a two-course meal without drinks stays under $65, and the Rittenhouse Square setting works well in daylight. Dinner on Friday or Saturday runs until 11pm, which suits a longer evening, but the room gets busier and reservations matter more. For a relaxed meal, a weekday lunch is the easier booking.
What are alternatives to Parc in Philadelphia?
Fork offers a more upscale, chef-driven take on European cooking at a higher price point. Friday Saturday Sunday is the choice for a modern tasting-menu format. Barbuzzo is the closest in casual all-day energy but skews Italian rather than French. If you want serious cooking without the brasserie format, Fork is the clearer step up from Parc.
Is Parc good for a special occasion?
It works for a relaxed celebration rather than a landmark dinner — the $$ pricing and brasserie format set expectations accordingly. The wine list (230 selections, primarily French, 2,520 inventory) adds genuine occasion credibility. For a more formal special-occasion meal, Fork or Friday Saturday Sunday offer a higher-commitment experience; Parc is the better call when the occasion calls for atmosphere over ceremony.
Location
227 S 18th St, Philadelphia, PA 19103
Philadelphia, United States
Compare Parc
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parc | French | Easy | |
| Fork | New American | Unknown | |
| Friday Saturday Sunday | New American | Unknown | |
| South Philly Barbacoa | Mexican | Unknown | |
| Barbuzzo | Italian | Unknown | |
| Federal Donuts | Doughnuts | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Parc and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Fork, New American, New American
- Friday Saturday Sunday, New American, New American
- South Philly Barbacoa, Mexican, Mexican
- Barbuzzo, Italian, Italian
- Federal Donuts, Doughnuts, Doughnuts
Parc is the most accessible French option in central Philadelphia, but it's operating in a city with strong competition across cuisines and price tiers. Against Fork and Friday Saturday Sunday, both New American at a comparable price, Parc wins on format flexibility (all-day service, walk-in viability) and wine depth, but loses on culinary ambition. If you want more creative cooking and a tighter chef-driven menu, Fork or Friday Saturday Sunday are better choices. If you want a reliable brasserie with a serious French wine list and no booking anxiety, Parc is the call.
Barbuzzo operates in a similar casual register but in an Italian Mediterranean format, a better pick if your group is splitting between pasta and pizza rather than steak frites and escargots. South Philly Barbacoa is a different category entirely (Mexican, lower price point, different neighbourhood) and isn't a direct substitute. Federal Donuts is casual quick-service, not in the same comparison set for a sit-down meal.
The practical case for Parc over its peers: longer hours, easier booking, and a wine program that outperforms its price tier. If you're a wine-focused diner who wants a French list with genuine range at a $$ price, Parc is the most efficient choice in Philadelphia for that specific combination.
Hours
- Monday
- 8 am–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 8 am–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 8 am–10 pm
- Thursday
- 8 am–10 pm
- Friday
- 8 am–11 pm
- Saturday
- 9:30 am–11 pm
- Sunday
- 9:30 am–10 pm
Recognized By
Explore Philadelphia
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